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Dive into the research topics where Kieron O'Hara is active.

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Featured researches published by Kieron O'Hara.


web science | 2006

A framework for web science

Tim Berners-Lee; Wendy Hall; James A. Hendler; Kieron O'Hara; Nigel Shadbolt; Daniel J. Weitzner

This text sets out a series of approaches to the analysis and synthesis of the World Wide Web, and other web-like information structures. A comprehensive set of research questions is outlined, together with a sub-disciplinary breakdown, emphasising the multi-faceted nature of the Web, and the multi-disciplinary nature of its study and development. These questions and approaches together set out an agenda for Web Science, the science of decentralised information systems. Web Science is required both as a way to understand the Web, and as a way to focus its development on key communicational and representational requirements. The text surveys central engineering issues, such as the development of the Semantic Web, Web services and P2P. Analytic approaches to discover the Webs topology, or its graph-like structures, are examined. Finally, the Web as a technology is essentially socially embedded; therefore various issues and requirements for Web use and governance are also reviewed.


IEEE Intelligent Systems | 2004

Knowledge representation with ontologies: the present and future

Christopher Brewster; Kieron O'Hara

Recently, we have seen an explosion of interest in ontologies as artifacts to represent human knowledge and as critical components in knowledge management, the semantic Web, business-to-business applications, and several other application areas. Various research communities commonly assume that ontologies are the appropriate modeling structure for representing knowledge. However, little discussion has occurred regarding the actual range of knowledge an ontology can successfully represent.


IEEE Intelligent Systems | 2012

Linked Open Government Data: Lessons from Data.gov.uk

Nigel Shadbolt; Kieron O'Hara; Tim Berners-Lee; Nicholas Gibbins; Hugh Glaser; Wendy Hall; m.c. schraefel

A project to extract value from open government data contributes to the population of the linked data Web with high-value data of good provenance.


IEEE Intelligent Systems | 2003

Identifying communities of practice through ontology network analysis

Harith Alani; Srinandan Dasmahapatra; Kieron O'Hara; Nigel Shadbolt

This article describes Ontocopi, a tool for identifying communities of practice by analyzing ontologies of relevant working domains. Ontocopi spots patterns in ontological formal relations, traversing the ontology from instance to instance via selected relations.


international semantic web conference | 2008

Semantic Modelling of User Interests Based on Cross-Folksonomy Analysis

Martin Szomszor; Harith Alani; Iván Cantador; Kieron O'Hara; Nigel Shadbolt

The continued increase in Web usage, in particular participation in folksonomies, reveals a trend towards a more dynamic and interactive Web where individuals can organise and share resources. Tagging has emerged as the de-facto standard for the organisation of such resources, providing a versatile and reactive knowledge management mechanism that users find easy to use and understand. It is common nowadays for users to have multiple profiles in various folksonomies, thus distributing their tagging activities. In this paper, we present a method for the automatic consolidation of user profiles across two popular social networking sites, and subsequent semantic modelling of their interests utilising Wikipedia as a multi-domain model. We evaluate how much can be learned from such sites, and in which domains the knowledge acquired is focussed. Results show that far richer interest profiles can be generated for users when multiple tag-clouds are combined.


International Journal of Human-computer Studies \/ International Journal of Man-machine Studies | 1999

The experimental evaluation of knowledge acquisition techniques and methods

Nigel Shadbolt; Kieron O'Hara; Louise Crow

The special problems of experimentally evaluating knowledge acquisition and knowledge engineering tools, techniques and methods are outlined, and illustrated in detail with reference to two series of studies. The first is a series of experiments undertaken at Nottingham University under the aegis of the UK Alvey initiative and the ESPRIT project ACKnowledge. The second is the series of Sisyphus benchmark studies. A suggested programme of experimental evaluation is outlined which is informed by the problems with using Sisyphus for evaluation.


International Journal of Human-computer Studies \/ International Journal of Man-machine Studies | 2007

Editorial: Knowledge representation with ontologies: Present challenges-Future possibilities

Christopher Brewster; Kieron O'Hara

Ontologies have become the knowledge representation medium of choice in recent years for a range of computer science specialities including the Semantic Web, Agents, and Bio-informatics. There has been a great deal of research and development in this area combined with hype and reaction. This special issue is concerned with the limitations of ontologies and how these can be addressed, together with a consideration of how we can circumvent or go beyond these constraints. The introduction places the discussion in context and presents the papers included in this issue.


international semantic web conference | 2007

Unlocking the potential of public sector information with semantic web technology

Harith Alani; David Dupplaw; John Sheridan; Kieron O'Hara; John Darlington; Nigel Shadbolt; Carol Tullo

Governments often hold very rich data and whilst much of this information is published and available for re-use by others, it is often trapped by poor data structures, locked up in legacy data formats or in fragmented databases. One of the great benefits that Semantic Web (SW) technology offers is facilitating the large scale integration and sharing of distributed data sources. At the heart of information policy in the UK, the Office of Public Sector Information (OPSI) is the part of the UK government charged with enabling the greater re-use of public sector information. This paper describes the actions, findings, and lessons learnt from a pilot study, involving several parts of government and the public sector. The aim was to show to government how they can adopt SW technology for the dissemination, sharing and use of its data.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2006

Memories for Life: A Review of the Science and Technology

Kieron O'Hara; Richard Morris; Nigel Shadbolt; Graham J. Hitch; Wendy Hall; Neil Beagrie

This paper discusses scientific, social and technological aspects of memory. Recent developments in our understanding of memory processes and mechanisms, and their digital implementation, have placed the encoding, storage, management and retrieval of information at the forefront of several fields of research. At the same time, the divisions between the biological, physical and the digital worlds seem to be dissolving. Hence, opportunities for interdisciplinary research into memory are being created, between the life sciences, social sciences and physical sciences. Such research may benefit from immediate application into information management technology as a testbed. The paper describes one initiative, memories for life, as a potential common problem space for the various interested disciplines.


knowledge acquisition, modeling and management | 2002

Managing Reference: Ensuring Referential Integrity of Ontologies for the Semantic Web

Harith Alani; Srinandan Dasmahapatra; Nicholas Gibbins; Hugh Glaser; Steve Harris; Yannis Kalfoglou; Kieron O'Hara; Nigel Shadbolt

The diversity and distributed nature of the resources available in the semantic web poses significant challenges when these are used to help automatically build an ontology. One persistent and pervasive problem is that of the resolution or elimination of coreference that arises when more than one identifier is used to refer to the same resource. Tackling this problem is crucial for the referential integrity, and subsequently the quality of results, of any ontology-based knowledge service. We have built a coreference management service to be used alongside the population and maintenance of an ontology. An ontology based knowledge service that identifies communities of practice (CoPs) is also used to maintain the heuristics used in the coreference management system. This approach is currently being applied in a large scale experiment harvesting resources from various UK computer science departments with the aim of building a large, generic web-accessible ontology.

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Wendy Hall

University of Southampton

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Max Van Kleek

University of Southampton

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David Stevens

University of Nottingham

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Ramine Tinati

University of Southampton

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Craig Webber

University of Southampton

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Elaine Mackey

University of Manchester

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